INTERNATIONAL EDITION
QUARTERLY EDITION • N° 113 • OCTOBER - NOVEMBER - DECEMBER 2020
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THE AFRICA REPORT
JEUNE AFRIQUE MEDIA GROUP
ZIMBABWE Team Mnangagwa circles the wagons GOLD BOOM How smugglers rip off Africa
NIGERIA (REALLY) HEADING?
500 million people and a trillion-dollar economy, or things fall apart
– 35-page special inside –
NIGERIA AT 60
FINANCE AFRICA’S TOP 200 BANKS face the Covid slump
N° 113 • OCTOBER-NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2020
www.theafricareport.com
WHERE IS
Atiku Abubakar Aliko Dangote Emmanuel Macron Yemi Osinbajo Abdul Samad Rabiu Bola Tinubu
Contributions by
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO FREE PRIMARY EDUCATION IS NOW A REALITY Free basic educa tion is a considerable chall e n g e o f P r e s i d e n t Fé l i x - A n t o i n e T s h i s e k e d i Tshilombo’s five-year term; he considers it “a priority of priorities”, guaranteed by article 43 of the Constitution, which enshrines its free and compulsory provision in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. As one of his December 2018 campaign promises, included in his presidential programme under pillar 8 of the section devoted t o Pe o p l e , Fé l i x - A n t o i n e Tshisekedi Tshilombo intends to lay the foundations of this new Congo, where educating young people is the guarantee of a true democracy, one that provides access to information, understanding of citizen’s rights and duties, freedom of thought, peace and the transformation of the enormous potential of the Congolese people for a better future in the heart of Africa and in the concert of nations for the next 60 years. Expressed in his “People First” vision, the fifth Congolese Head of State’s tenacity in wanting to provide Congolese children with the best is justified because he understands the benefits of education as a powerful agent of change and for improving citizens’ health and quality of life. Free basic education, signifies a desire to lighten the burden on parents because its enables children from underprivileged backgrounds to a ttend school, improving teachers’ salar y packa ges and improving school infrastructure, is clearly noticeable in the DRC.
Remarkable progress A year on and despite the economic context, free education is well and truly implemented throughout the entire country. The first achievements have gone well beyond the expectations. By the start of the new school year in September 2019, the number of enrolments in official and/ or state schools had doubled or even tripled. Around 4 million school-age children were able to resume their schooling, having dropped out due to lack of funds. Teachers’ salaries have improved significantly. The first tier of salaries for standing and sitting teachers (school administrators) has been paid. Teachers in Catholic schools (71.4%) were paid and 11,465 Catholic schools (70.7%) were entered into the state database and budgeted for. The running costs of primary schools as well as kindergarten, primar y and secondar y schools have been increased while other school fees deemed unnecessary have been abolished. Several school infrastructures, both in Kinshasa and in the hinterland, have been built along the lines of the Mokengeli Institute and the Camp Tshatshi school.
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The education of young people is the guarantee of a true democracy His Excellency Félix-Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo, President of the Democratic Republic of Congo
ADVERTORIAL
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Education is a powerful agent of change From political will to funding
The World Bank is not the only financing partner. France has made 106 million euros of French Government funds available within the framework of the Development and Debt Reduction Contract (C2D) signed between the DRC and France in November 2019 and targeting, among other things, education and vocational training. Free basic education goes hand in hand with quality education. The funds allocated to the education sector for the 2020 fiscal year ($1.647 billion, i. e. 17.84% of total general budget expenditure) are supplemented by France, which has promised to support free education in the DRC with funding of 15 million euros, with emphasis on teacher training. The government still needs to consolidate its efforts to mobilise more public revenues in order to respond positively to the teachers’ expectations, which are essentially focused on the additional pay for September 2019, the payment of unpaid and new secondary school teachers, and the transport and housing allowance to be rolled out in all cities across the country for the next school year.
Given the success of free basic education, DRC’s Head of State Félix-Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo is winning his gamble of uplifting Congolese people, who have long been on the sidelines, in order to make the DRC “an exporter of peace, and to change the lens and narrative about it”, as he put it during the high-level Addis Ababa Fr a m e w o r k A g r e e m e n t m e e t i n g i n N e w Yo r k in September 2019. Félix-Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo is certainly on track to meeting this challenge.
THE PRESIDENCE’S OFFICE OF THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
Palais de la Nation, Avenue Roi Baudouin - Gombe-Kinshasa-BP 201 Kin1- Tel.: (+243) 844 999 601 Email:communication@presidence.cd - http://www.presidence.cd - D @Presidence_RDC
JAMG - © PRESIDENCE OF DRC
As for financing, the government’s efforts to raise revenue to bring this noble vision to fruition, the cost of which is estimated at $2.64 billion for the 2020 fiscal year, have been supported by international partners. President Félix-Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo’s ambitious project found the enthusiasm of the World Bank, which agreed to allocate US $800 million to finance the “Equity and Strengthening of the Educa tion System” Project (PERSE), essentially aimed at improving access to primary education in the provinces and strengthening basic education systems.
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO Bringing value to private investment in the agricultural sector in D.R. Congo
“Challenges and Prospects” The Democratic Republic of Congo, an agricultural haven with its 80 million hectares of arable land offering a wide range of opportunities has seen shortcomings exacerbated by the pandemic, particularly on the socio-economic level and more specifically in terms of food supplies from the provinces to the capital. Therefore, to alleviate with the consequences of this health crisis and with the aim of building a more resilient and diversified economy, the Democratic Republic of Congo has set up the Covid-19 Multisectoral Emergency Mitigation Programme (PMUAIC-19), with a budget estimated at over $2.6 billion, with the goal, among other priorities, to promote local entrepreneurship in various sectors and industries.
“It’s time for the soil to take its revenge on the subsoil!”
of a number of public and private sector and civil society organisations with an estimated total cost of US$46.8 million that covers operating and capital expenditures throughout the value chain cycle. Linked to the PMUAIC-19, the National Investment Promotion Agency (ANAPI), the technical agency advising the Central and Provincial Governments on Investment Promotion and Improvement of the Business Climate, has in turn included Agriculture among its priorities included in its Emergency Plan for the year 2020, alongside Infrastructure and Energy. For ANAPI, revamping productive investments in the agricultural sector is indeed one of the key strategies and optimal solutions to be encouraged in order to rethink the Congolese economy, create added value, considerably reduce unemployment and improve the trade balance position by substantially reducing food imports.
This Programme’s goal is to provide support for macroeconomic stability and economic recovery through the implementation of measures and assistance to essential economic activities likely to mitigate the shock of the pandemic, improve the management of productive sectors, and ensure a strengthened resilience through economic diversification.
ANAPI’s conviction is ultimately supported by the DRC’s great potential with its 80 million ha of arable land, 4 million ha of irrigable land, favorable climatic conditions and exceptional rainfall as well as several other comparative advantages that can be harnessed to develop a real a gro-industrial chain on a national, continental and even global level. This is President Félix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo’s vision which he perfectly summed up when he said, “It’s time for the soil to take its revenge on the subsoil!”.
With the same aim of building resilience and diversifying the national economy, the Ministry of Agriculture has responded to the Government’s aspirations through the lauch of a Voluntary Agricultural Programme which calls for the involvement
Faced with the structural gaps between supply and demand of agricultural products, and taking into account the upheavals caused by Covid-19, the successful revival of the agricultural sector is critical to address the imbalance in the supply
His Excellency Mr. Felix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo, President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
MDMM for JAMG
Gwenn Dubourthoumieu for JAMG
ADVERTORIAL
ANAPI is calling on national and international investors to boost the Congolese agricultural sector of domestic consumer products such as maize, cassava, rice, beans and the disruption of exports of products derived from perennial crops such as coffee, cocoa and tea. It is worth noting that some major agricultural projects have already been undertaken to increase and strengthen food self-sufficiency. During his s p e e c h o n t h e o c c a s i o n o f t h e c o u n t r y ’s 6 0 t h anniversary of independence, His Excellency Mr. Felix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo, President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo indicated, “Thirty-three thousand hectares across the country have been allocated to food crops and are starting to produce their first results, for example 3,000 tons of rice in Kimpese and 4,000 tons of paddy rice in Nkundi. We will soon be harvesting and processing the cassava planted on 800 hectares in Wangata.” Processing this output into finished products, in the value chain to create national wealth, requires ipso facto, investment in the energy sector with the installation of pico, micro, and small hydroelectric plants and even other alternative sources by developing renewable energy (biomass, solar, etc.) for which the country has considerable resources. It is important to point out that DRC’s hydroelectric potential is estimated at more than 100,000 MW, of which only 2,520 MW, or 2.5%, has so far been harnessed.
ANAPI, which is also encoura ging na tional and international investors to boost the Congolese agricultural sector, is opting for a specific focus on a few sectors, including those for mass consumption and some perennial crops that can be exported, thus generating foreign exchange reserves for the national economy. It is important to bear in mind that there are several incentives to investing in the agricultural sector today, including customs, tax and parafiscal tax exemptions granted by the Investment Code (Law No. 004/2002 of 21 February 2002) of the Agricultural Law, and the Decree on Strategic Partnership on the Value Chain). Over and above these exemptions and incentives, the Democratic Republic of Congo guarantees the continuous improvement of the business climate, which is admittedly not yet at its best, however efforts to combat corruption and establish good governance through the rule of law are gradually taking shape. That in mind President Tshisekedi, created an Anti-Corruption Agency (APLC – Agence de prévention et de lutte contre la corruption) by the Decree dated 28 March 2020 with the main mission to prevent and the corruption that is plaguing the country, ahead of any action by judicial institutions. In summary, ANAPI reassures investors of its determination and commitment to assist and support them with regard to the implementation of their projects in DR Congo.■
NATIONAL INVESTMENT PROMOTION AGENCY 33C, Boulevard du 30 Juin B.P.: 1797 - Kinshasa 1 Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo Email: anapi@investindrc.com Tel: 00243 999 925 026
JAMG - © See mention
D.R.
The electricity sub-sector being totally liberalised, and with the promulgation of Law n° 18/016 of 9 July 2018 relating to Public-Private Partnership, ANAPI is calling on both public and private investors from all shores to come and invest in the energy sector in the Democratic Republic of Congo.